Junior Ganymede
Servants to folly, creation, and the Lord JESUS CHRIST. We endeavor to give satisfaction

Two Reasons the Willie and Martin Company Chose Poorly

November 28th, 2020 by G.

The Willie and Martin handcart companies left too late in the season. They thought the Lord would do miracles for them and they would come through, so to speak, on dry ground. They did not. The miracles they got were different and later and came along with a heaping of suffering.

A Ephraim Hanks biography reminded me of two reasons why they should not have expected the miracles they did.

First, Brigham Young and the first exodus of the Saints intended to make it out to the Valley the year they left Nauvoo. But they eventually decided to halt at Winter Quarters because it was getting dangerously late in the year to try the journey. So the handcart companies were in effect claiming a larger store of virtue and faith than the Brethren or the Saints (to their credit, they probably did not realize this). Miracles do not come as rewards for lavish displays of conspicuous virtue.

Second, when Brother Brigham first announced the handcarts one of his main reasons is that the handcarters could leave earlier in the season since they had less kit to assemble. Blessings are not likely to attend following a commandment contrary to its expressed intent.

The companies themselves I bet were not aware of any this. They were just ignorant and foolish like the rest of us. But facts are facts, and consequences attend our choices according to the choice that we made, no matter what our motives may have been.

Still and all, for my own well-intentioned choices I plead mercy.

Comments (3)
Filed under: Deseret Review | Tags:
Tags:
November 28th, 2020 14:38:29
3 comments

Zen
November 29, 2020

There are other things as well. Levi Savage, a true underappreciated hero of Church History, warned them, prophesied of problems and deaths, and when they were determined to anyway, he decided to go with them.


Bookslinger
November 29, 2020

I forget where I read it, but the survivors alledgedly never complained in public about their company leadership’s decision to continue on instead of over-wintering.

But, yeah. It’s a big lesson.

“They were just ignorant and foolish _like the rest of us._”

Amen. And mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa.


E.C.
November 30, 2020

@ Zen,
Yes, Levi Savage was a true Saint. He warned, he was rejected, but he chose to share in their suffering in spite of it all, in the spirit of true meekness.
@ Books,
True, and amen.

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.